The only thing this book has going for it is that it has an interesting premise. A teenage boy tries to create the world's biggest poutine to get into the Guinness Book of World Records so that his deadbeat mom sees it and comes back home to him. While reading, I wanted to see the hardships and development the characters go through while seeing the big poutine come to life. Unfortunately, the story was way too fast-paced for that to happen. I was so surprised when I reached the end of the book because I was like, "That's it?" They barely have any trouble constructing the world's biggest poutine; on one page, they're making the poutine, the next page, it's completed. I would not recommend this book. It has a promising setup with a lot of potential, but an anticlimactic and boring middle and end.